I came across this today and broke up laughing. These are seriously clever! Thanks to the Washington Post. I wasn’t aware of their neologism contest, but I am now! Read and enjoy. Pass it along.
No one can write decently who is distrustful of the reader’s intelligence or whose attitude is patronizing.
If you haven’t got an idea, start a story anyway. You can always throw it away, and maybe by the time you get to the fourth page you will have an idea, and you’ll only have to throw away the first three pages.
My aim is to put down what I see and what I feel in the best and simplest way I can tell it.
If you have an idea that you genuinely think is good, don’t let some idiot talk you out of it.
The most valuable of all talents is that of never using two words when one will do.
Thank your readers and the critics who praise you, and then ignore them. Write for the most intelligent, wittiest, wisest audience in the universe: Write to please yourself.
I haven’t got 10 rules that guarantee success, though I promise I’d share them if I did. The truth is that I found success by stumbling off alone in a direction most people thought was a dead end, breaking all the 1990s shibboleths about children’s books in the process.
If my poetry aims to achieve anything, it’s to deliver people from the limited ways in which they see and feel.
Do you know what a playwright is? A playwright is someone who lets his guts hang out on the stage.
Everybody walks past a thousand story ideas every day. The good writers are the ones who see five or six of them. Most people don’t see any.
I do not over-intellectualize the production process. I try to keep it simple: Tell the damned story.
Editor: A person employed by a newspaper, whose business it is to separate the wheat from the chaff, and to see that the chaff is printed.